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The White Devil

Act I

THE SCENE - ITALY


SCENE I


Enter Count Lodovico, Antonelli, and Gasparo


Lodo. Banish'd!


Ant. It griev'd me much to hear the sentence.


Lodo. Ha, ha, O Democritus, thy gods

That govern the whole world! courtly reward

And punishment. Fortune 's a right whore:

If she give aught, she deals it in small parcels,

That she may take away all at one swoop.

This 'tis to have great enemies! God 'quite them.

Your wolf no longer seems to be a wolf

Than when she 's hungry.


Gas. You term those enemies,

Are men of princely rank.


Lodo. Oh, I pray for them:

The violent thunder is adored by those

Are pasht in pieces by it.


Ant. Come, my lord,

You are justly doom'd; look but a little back

Into your former life: you have in three years

Ruin'd the noblest earldom.


Gas. Your followers

Have swallowed you, like mummia, and being sick

With such unnatural and horrid physic,

Vomit you up i' th' kennel.


Ant. All the damnable degrees

Of drinking have you stagger'd through. One citizen,

Is lord of two fair manors, call'd you master,

Only for caviare.


Gas. Those noblemen

Which were invited to your prodigal feasts,

(Wherein the phoenix scarce could 'scape your throats)

Laugh at your misery, as fore-deeming you

An idle meteor, which drawn forth, the earth

Would be soon lost i' the air.


Ant. Jest upon you,

And say you were begotten in an earthquake,

You have ruin'd such fair lordships.


Lodo. Very good.

This well goes with two buckets: I must tend

The pouring out of either.


Gas. Worse than these.

You have acted certain murders here in Rome,

Bloody and full of horror.


Lodo. 'Las, they were flea-bitings:

Why took they not my head then?


Gas. O, my lord!

The law doth sometimes mediate, thinks it good

Not ever to steep violent sins in blood:

This gentle penance may both end your crimes,

And in the example better these bad times.


Lodo. So; but I wonder then some great men 'scape

This banishment: there 's Paulo Giordano Ursini,

The Duke of Brachiano, now lives in Rome,

And by close panderism seeks to prostitute

The honour of Vittoria Corombona:

Vittoria, she that might have got my pardon

For one kiss to the duke.


Ant. Have a full man within you:

We see that trees bear no such pleasant fruit

There where they grew first, as where they are new set.

Perfumes, the more they are chaf'd, the more they render

Their pleasing scents, and so affliction

Expresseth virtue fully, whether true,

Or else adulterate.


Lodo. Leave your painted comforts;

I 'll make Italian cut-works in their guts

If ever I return.


Gas. Oh, sir.


Lodo. I am patient.

I have seen some ready to be executed,

Give pleasant looks, and money, and grown familiar

With the knave hangman; so do I; I thank them,

And would account them nobly merciful,

Would they dispatch me quickly.


Ant. Fare you well;

We shall find time, I doubt not, to repeal

Your banishment.


Lodo. I am ever bound to you.

This is the world's alms; pray make use of it.

Great men sell sheep, thus to be cut in pieces,

When first they have shorn them bare, and sold their fleeces.

[Exeunt


SCENE II


Enter Brachiano, Camillo, Flamineo, Vittoria


Brach. Your best of rest.


Vit. Unto my lord the duke,

The best of welcome. More lights: attend the duke.

[Exeunt Camillo and Vittoria.


Brach. Flamineo.


Flam. My lord.


Brach. Quite lost, Flamineo.


Flam. Pursue your noble wishes, I am prompt

As lightning to your service. O my lord!

The fair Vittoria, my happy sister,

Shall give you present audience - Gentlemen, [Whisper.

Let the caroch go on - and 'tis his pleasure

You put out all your torches and depart.


Brach. Are we so happy?


Flam. Can it be otherwise?

Observ'd you not to-night, my honour'd lord,

Which way soe'er you went, she threw her eyes?

I have dealt already with her chambermaid,

Zanche the Moor, and she is wondrous proud

To be the agent for so high a spirit.


Brach. We are happy above thought, because 'bove merit.


Flam. 'Bove merit! we may now talk freely: 'bove merit! what is 't you

doubt? her coyness! that 's but the superficies of lust most women have;

yet why should ladies blush to hear that named, which they do not fear

to handle? Oh, they are politic; they know our desire is increased by

the difficulty of enjoying; whereas satiety is a blunt, weary, and

drowsy passion. If the buttery-hatch at court stood continually open,

there would be nothing so passionate crowding, nor hot suit after the

beverage.


Brach. Oh, but her jealous husband - -


Flam. Hang him; a gilder that hath his brains perished with quicksilver

is not more cold in the liver. The great barriers moulted not more

feathers, than he hath shed hairs, by the confession of his doctor. An

Irish gamester that will play himself naked, and then wage all

downward, at hazard, is not more venturous. So unable to please a

woman, that, like a Dutch doublet, all his back is shrunk into his

breaches.

Shroud you within this closet, good my lord;

Some trick now must be thought on to divide

My brother-in-law from his fair bed-fellow.


Brach. Oh, should she fail to come - -


Flam. I must not have your lordship thus unwisely amorous. I myself

have not loved a lady, and pursued her with a great deal of under-age

protestation, whom some three or four gallants that have enjoyed would

with all their hearts have been glad to have been rid of. 'Tis just

like a summer bird-cage in a garden: the birds that are without despair

to get in, and the birds that are within despair and are in a

consumption for fear they shall never get out. Away, away, my lord.

[Exit Brachiano as Camillo enters.


See here he comes. This fellow by his apparel

Some men would judge a politician;

But call his wit in question, you shall find it

Merely an ass in 's foot-cloth. How now, brother?

What, travelling to bed with your kind wife?


Cam. I assure you, brother, no. My voyage lies

More northerly, in a far colder clime.

I do not well remember, I protest,

When I last lay with her.


Flam. Strange you should lose your count.


Cam. We never lay together, but ere morning

There grew a flaw between us.


Flam. 'T had been your part


To have made up that flaw.


Cam. True, but she loathes I should be seen in 't.


Flam. Why, sir, what 's the matter?


Cam. The duke your master visits me, I thank him;

And I perceive how, like an earnest bowler,

He very passionately leans that way

he should have his bowl run.


Flam. I hope you do not think - -


Cam. That nobleman bowl booty? faith, his cheek

Hath a most excellent bias: it would fain

Jump with my mistress.


Flam. Will you be an ass,

Despite your Aristotle? or a cuckold,

Contrary to your Ephemerides,

Which shows you under what a smiling planet

You were first swaddled?


Cam. Pew wew, sir; tell me not

Of planets nor of Ephemerides.

A man may be made cuckold in the day-time,

When the stars' eyes are out.


Flam. Sir, good-bye you;

I do commit you to your pitiful pillow

Stuffed with horn-shavings.


Cam. Brother!


Flam. God refuse me.

Might I advise you now, your only course

Were to lock up your wife.


Cam. 'Twere very good.


Flam. Bar her the sight of revels.


Cam. Excellent.


Flam. Let her not go to church, but, like a hound

In leon, at your heels.


Cam. 'Twere for her honour.


Flam. And so you should be certain in one fortnight,

Despite her chastity or innocence,

To be cuckolded, which yet is in suspense:

This is my counsel, and I ask no fee for 't.


Cam. Come, you know not where my nightcap wrings me.


Flam. Wear it a' th' old fashion; let your large ears come through,

it will be more easy - nay, I will be bitter - bar your wife of her

entertainment: women are more willingly and more gloriously chaste,

when they are least restrained of their liberty. It seems you would

be a fine capricious, mathematically jealous coxcomb; take the height

of your own horns with a Jacob's staff, afore they are up. These

politic enclosures for paltry mutton, makes more rebellion in the

flesh, than all the provocative electuaries doctors have uttered since

last jubilee.


Cam. This doth not physic me - -


Flam. It seems you are jealous: I 'll show you the error of it by a

familiar example: I have seen a pair of spectacles fashioned with such

perspective art, that lay down but one twelve pence a' th' board,

'twill appear as if there were twenty; now should you wear a pair of

these spectacles, and see your wife tying her shoe, you would imagine

twenty hands were taking up of your wife's clothes, and this would put

you into a horrible causeless fury.


Cam. The fault there, sir, is not in the eyesight.


Flam. True, but they that have the yellow jaundice think all objects

they look on to be yellow. Jealousy is worse; her fits present to a

man, like so many bubbles in a basin of water, twenty several crabbed

faces, many times makes his own shadow his cuckold-maker. [Enter

Vittoria Corombona.] See, she comes; what reason have you to be

jealous of this creature? what an ignorant ass or flattering knave

might be counted, that should write sonnets to her eyes, or call her

brow the snow of Ida, or ivory of Corinth; or compare her hair to the

blackbird's bill, when 'tis liker the blackbird's feather? This is

all. Be wise; I will make you friends, and you shall go to bed

together. Marry, look you, it shall not be your seeking. Do you stand

upon that, by any means: walk you aloof; I would not have you seen

in 't. - Sister [my lord attend you in the banqueting-house,] your

husband is wondrous discontented.


Vit. I did nothing to displease him; I carved to him at supper-time.


Flam. [You need not have carved him, in faith; they say he is a capon

already. I must now seemingly fall out with you.] Shall a gentleman

so well descended as Camillo [a lousy slave, that within this twenty

years rode with the black guard in the duke's carriage, 'mongst spits

and dripping-pans!] -


Cam. Now he begins to tickle her.


Flam. An excellent scholar [one that hath a head fill'd with calves'

brains without any sage in them,] come crouching in the hams to you for

a night's lodging? [that hath an itch in 's hams, which like the fire

at the glass-house hath not gone out this seven years] Is he not a

courtly gentleman? [when he wears white satin, one would take him by

his black muzzle to be no other creature than a maggot] You are a

goodly foil, I confess, well set out [but cover'd with a false stone -

yon counterfeit diamond].


Cam. He will make her know what is in me.


Flam. Come, my lord attends you; thou shalt go to bed to my lord.


Cam. Now he comes to 't.


Flam. [With a relish as curious as a vintner going to taste new wine.]

[To Camillo.] I am opening your case hard.


Cam. A virtuous brother, o' my credit!


Flam. He will give thee a ring with a philosopher's stone in it.


Cam. Indeed, I am studying alchemy.


Flam. Thou shalt lie in a bed stuffed with turtle's feathers; swoon in

perfumed linen, like the fellow was smothered in roses. So perfect

shall be thy happiness, that as men at sea think land, and trees, and

ships, go that way they go; so both heaven and earth shall seem to go

your voyage. Shalt meet him; 'tis fix'd, with nails of diamonds to

inevitable necessity.


Vit. How shalt rid him hence?


Flam. [I will put brize in 's tail, set him gadding presently.] I have

almost wrought her to it; I find her coming: but, might I advise you

now, for this night I would not lie with her, I would cross her humour

to make her more humble.


Cam. Shall I, shall I?


Flam. It will show in you a supremacy of judgment.


Cam. True, and a mind differing from the tumultuary opinion; for, quae

negata, grata.


Flam. Right: you are the adamant shall draw her to you, though you keep

distance off.


Cam. A philosophical reason.


Flam. Walk by her a' th' nobleman's fashion, and tell her you will lie

with her at the end of the progress.


Cam. Vittoria, I cannot be induc'd, or as a man would say, incited - -


Vit. To do what, sir?


Cam. To lie with you to-night. Your silkworm used to fast every third

day, and the next following spins the better. To-morrow at night, I am

for you.


Vit. You 'll spin a fair thread, trust to 't.


Flam. But do you hear, I shall have you steal to her chamber about

midnight.


Cam. Do you think so? why look you, brother, because you shall not say

I 'll gull you, take the key, lock me into the chamber, and say you

shall be sure of me.


Flam. In troth I will; I 'll be your jailor once.


Cam. A pox on 't, as I am a Christian! tell me to-morrow how scurvily

she takes my unkind parting.


Flam. I will.


Cam. Didst thou not mark the jest of the silkworm?

Good-night; in faith, I will use this trick often.


Flam. Do, do, do. [Exit Camillo.

So, now you are safe. Ha, ha, ha, thou entanglest thyself in thine own

work like a silkworm. [Enter Brachiano.] Come, sister, darkness hides

your blush. Women are like cursed dogs: civility keeps them tied all

daytime, but they are let loose at midnight; then they do most good, or

most mischief. My lord, my lord!


Zanche brings out a carpet, spreads it, and lays on it two fair cushions.

Enter Cornelia listening, but unperceived.


Brach. Give credit: I could wish time would stand still,

And never end this interview, this hour;

But all delight doth itself soon'st devour.

Let me into your bosom, happy lady,

Pour out, instead of eloquence, my vows.

Loose me not, madam, for if you forgo me,

I am lost eternally.


Vit. Sir, in the way of pity,

I wish you heart-whole.


Brach. You are a sweet physician.


Vit. Sure, sir, a loathed cruelty in ladies

Is as to doctors many funerals:

It takes away their credit.


Brach. Excellent creature!

We call the cruel fair; what name for you

That are so merciful?


Zan. See now they close.


Flam. Most happy union.


Corn. [Aside.] My fears are fall'n upon me: oh, my heart!

My son the pander! now I find our house

Sinking to ruin. Earthquakes leave behind,

Where they have tyranniz'd, iron, or lead, or stone;

But woe to ruin, violent lust leaves none.


Brach. What value is this jewel?


Vit. 'Tis the ornament of a weak fortune.


Brach. In sooth, I 'll have it; nay, I will but change

My jewel for your jewel.


Flam. Excellent;

His jewel for her jewel: well put in, duke.


Brach. Nay, let me see you wear it.


Vit. Here, sir?


Brach. Nay, lower, you shall wear my jewel lower.


Flam. That 's better: she must wear his jewel lower.


Vit. To pass away the time, I 'll tell your grace

A dream I had last night.


Brach. Most wishedly.


Vit. A foolish idle dream:

Methought I walked about the mid of night

Into a churchyard, where a goodly yew-tree

Spread her large root in ground: under that yew,

As I sat sadly leaning on a grave,

Chequer'd with cross-sticks, there came stealing in

Your duchess and my husband; one of them

A pickaxe bore, th' other a rusty spade,

And in rough terms they 'gan to challenge me

About this yew.


Brach. That tree?


Vit. This harmless yew;

They told me my intent was to root up

That well-grown yew, and plant i' the stead of it

A wither'd blackthorn; and for that they vow'd

To bury me alive. My husband straight

With pickaxe 'gan to dig, and your fell duchess

With shovel, like a fury, voided out

The earth and scatter'd bones: Lord, how methought

I could not pray.


Flam. No; the devil was in your dream.


Vit. When to my rescue there arose, methought,

A whirlwind, which let fall a massy arm

From that strong plant;

And both were struck dead by that sacred yew,

In that base shallow grave that was their due.


Flam. Excellent devil!

She hath taught him in a dream

To make away his duchess and her husband.


Brach. Sweetly shall I interpret this your dream.

You are lodg'd within his arms who shall protect you

From all the fevers of a jealous husband,

From the poor envy of our phlegmatic duchess.

I 'll seat you above law, and above scandal;

Give to your thoughts the invention of delight,

And the fruition; nor shall government

Divide me from you longer, than a care

To keep you great: you shall to me at once

Be dukedom, health, wife, children, friends, and all.


Corn. [Advancing.] Woe to light hearts, they still forerun our fall!


Flam. What fury raised thee up? away, away. [Exit Zanche.


Corn. What make you here, my lord, this dead of night?

Never dropp'd mildew on a flower here till now.


Flam. I pray, will you go to bed then,

Lest you be blasted?


Corn. O that this fair garden

Had with all poison'd herbs of Thessaly

At first been planted; made a nursery

For witchcraft, rather than a burial plot

For both your honours!


Vit. Dearest mother, hear me.


Corn. O, thou dost make my brow bend to the earth.

Sooner than nature! See the curse of children!

In life they keep us frequently in tears;

And in the cold grave leave us in pale fears.


Brach. Come, come, I will not hear you.


Vit. Dear my lord.


Corn. Where is thy duchess now, adulterous duke?

Thou little dream'st this night she 's come to Rome.


Flam. How! come to Rome!


Vit. The duchess!


Brach. She had been better - -


Corn. The lives of princes should like dials move,

Whose regular example is so strong,

They make the times by them go right, or wrong.


Flam. So, have you done?


Corn. Unfortunate Camillo!


Vit. I do protest, if any chaste denial,

If anything but blood could have allay'd

His long suit to me - -


Corn. I will join with thee,

To the most woeful end e'er mother kneel'd:

If thou dishonour thus thy husband's bed,

Be thy life short as are the funeral tears

In great men's - -


Brach. Fie, fie, the woman's mad.


Corn. Be thy act Judas-like; betray in kissing:

May'st thou be envied during his short breath,

And pitied like a wretch after his death!


Vit. O me accurs'd! [Exit.


Flam. Are you out of your wits? my lord,

I 'll fetch her back again.


Brach. No, I 'll to bed:

Send Doctor Julio to me presently.

Uncharitable woman! thy rash tongue

Hath rais'd a fearful and prodigious storm:

Be thou the cause of all ensuing harm. [Exit.


Flam. Now, you that stand so much upon your honour,

Is this a fitting time a' night, think you,

To send a duke home without e'er a man?

I would fain know where lies the mass of wealth

Which you have hoarded for my maintenance,

That I may bear my bear out of the level

Of my lord's stirrup.


Corn. What! because we are poor

Shall we be vicious?


Flam. Pray, what means have you

To keep me from the galleys, or the gallows?

My father prov'd himself a gentleman,

Sold all 's land, and, like a fortunate fellow,

Died ere the money was spent. You brought me up

At Padua, I confess, where I protest,

For want of means - the University judge me -

I have been fain to heel my tutor's stockings,

At least seven years; conspiring with a beard,

Made me a graduate; then to this duke's service,

I visited the court, whence I return'd

More courteous, more lecherous by far,

But not a suit the richer. And shall I,

Having a path so open, and so free

To my preferment, still retain your milk

In my pale forehead? No, this face of mine

I 'll arm, and fortify with lusty wine,

'Gainst shame and blushing.


Corn. O that I ne'er had borne thee!


Flam. So would I;

I would the common'st courtesan in Rome

Had been my mother, rather than thyself.

Nature is very pitiful to whores,

To give them but few children, yet those children

Plurality of fathers; they are sure

They shall not want. Go, go,

Complain unto my great lord cardinal;

It may be he will justify the act.

Lycurgus wonder'd much, men would provide

Good stallions for their mares, and yet would suffer

Their fair wives to be barren.


Corn. Misery of miseries! [Exit.


Flam. The duchess come to court! I like not that.

We are engag'd to mischief, and must on;

As rivers to find out the ocean

Flow with crook bendings beneath forced banks,

Or as we see, to aspire some mountain's top,

The way ascends not straight, but imitates

The subtle foldings of a winter's snake,

So who knows policy and her true aspect,

Shall find her ways winding and indirect.

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